#1
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The Wuhan Weapon
Interesting story on fake UCI stickers, Saint Piran in Hot Water Over Allegedly Fake UCI Stickers on Unapproved Frames
https://www.msn.com/en-us/sports/oth...5131722&ei=167 |
#2
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wow
but who doesn't hate "moaners".
In all seriousness, can that fine crash a continental team? What does the official UCI sticker cost a team. This kind of cheat makes me think running a team must be very tough without a deep pocket sponsor. |
#3
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How long has this been a thing? The only bike I've ever had that had it is my 2016 Domane.
I am almost certain the BH G5 I had before the Domane did not have the UCI approval badge on it and that bike was definitely used in Pro racing in Europe. It's not about the team, I don't think they would have been able to get the bike approved. They would have had to work with the Chinese manufacturer + UCI to get the bike approved and then probably have to get new frames built with the logo applied at the factory. You'd think there would be a waiver program for this though where they do a quick inspection of the frame and decide if it is approved and don't make them get bikes with the logos factory applied. Last edited by benb; 10-22-2024 at 01:26 PM. |
#4
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Quote:
Here's the UCI FAQ regarding the process: https://assets.ctfassets.net/761l7gh..._FRAMESETS.pdf |
#5
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Bait and switch thread title of the year!
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#6
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It's the manufacturers responsibility to get it approved and the teams responsibility to verify frames they are racing on are uci approved. Many of the aliexpress bikes (or velobuilds or wherever this came from) claim that the frame is uci approved.
If i recall, the cynical part of it is the UCI trying to control everything but the optimistic part is to ensure frames maintain safety standards so frames aren't crashing the whole peloton or paralyzing riders.
__________________
"I used to be with it. Then they changed what it was. Now, what I'm with isn't it, and whats it is weird and scary." -Abe Simpson |
#7
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__________________
©2004 The Elefantino Corp. All rights reserved. |
#8
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I feel like the problem is they can't possibly get them approved, not so much the cost. I thought about getting my frames approved back when the effort was much lower and it cost a more reasonable amount. Not that a pro would ever ride one of my frames.
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#9
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Quote:
Quote:
As far as safety, they only require that the bike has been certified to ISO 4210 - but manufacturers may self-certify to this standard, so all the UCI knows is that the manufacturer claims that it has been certified to ISO 4210. |
#10
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sham
Quote:
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#11
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Quote:
__________________
"I used to be with it. Then they changed what it was. Now, what I'm with isn't it, and whats it is weird and scary." -Abe Simpson |
#12
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It seems like safety is the least believable rationale for certification. Next is sporting fairness and, most likely, a desire for control and more Swiss running around doing Swiss things. Of course the sport’s participants ultimately pay for it.
I wonder what they do with the samples? Does every official get a new bike to “test” each year? Maybe they are sold out the back door. |
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